Allexton
Allexton maps (2 available)
Map of Leicestershire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Leicestershire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Allexton photos (none available)
We have no photos of Allexton,although these nearby locations do:Allexton books (13 available)
Market Harborough Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Melton Mowbray Town and City Memories
Paperback
Uppingham Photographic Memories
Hardback
Allexton memories
Be the first to add a memory of Allexton.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Leicestershire below.
Leicestershire memories
Working on the boats.
The wooden boats in the picture belong to the riverside restaurant, out of shot to the right. As a teenager, in 1974, it was my job on a Sunday afternoon to hire these out. We did have a few people fall out of the boats, but no one complained. A warm brew and some towels was all it took to make things right.
A memory of Barrow Upon Soar contributed by Paul Howard
Barn Croft.
The house in the middle is where I lived from 1972. The address is 62 Main Street and the house was called Barn Croft. The house on the right was a farm and the house that the middle house was built on was part of the farmyard. When the farm closed, one of the daughters had this built c1930. She lived there until she died c1970. Her name was Olive Clarke and was one of three girls I believe. The house had a barn at the bottom of the garden, converted in 1990 after my father sold the property in 1985. I have some belongings of Olive's like an autograph book and a booklet ...read more here
A memory of Cossington contributed by The Frith Memory Archivist
Alma Friston nee Oldfield
I was born in Smeeton on April 23rd 1935. I remember staying with a Mr and Mrs Webb. As you approached Smeeton there were cottages on the left hand side, we stayed in the last one next to a lane. The cows came up this lane everyday for milking, quite often straying on to the garden, it was our job to shoo them away. Down this lane was a chapel which was on the left hand side, I remember singing here. We lived in Leicester during the war, having moved from Smeeton and Kibworth Harcourt.
I remember the grocery shop run by Miss Terry, we bought Jelly Dummies to suck on.
Lots of memories walking in the fields and smelling violets ...read more here
A memory of Smeeton Westerby contributed by Alma Friston
School Dance Display
The Wyggeston Girls Grammar School put on a Dance display for Parents. I remember my mum & younger sister coming to watch and my friend and I took them to a local espresso bar afterwards.
I also recall a visit with my dad to see Swan Lake c1949.
And I've seen Ray Charles a couple of times in the 60s, also Oscar Peterson, Jacques Loussier, and Elton John at the start of his career.
I haven't lived in Leicester for many years. All ths events took place in the 50s/60s.
Though I did see the Russian Ballet c1990.
A memory of Leicester contributed by maggie martin
Extracts From Allexton & Leicestershire books
Just by way of a little more
variety, Bill has been director
of Birmingham’s Christmas
light switch-on, and directed
a large performance by
school children at the
Millennium Dome as well
as performances for 10,000
children.
An extract from from"Loughborough - A History & Celebration".
There also used to be a lake on what is
now the site of the school’s sports hall.
Just over 100 years ago the school caught
fire and the waters of the lake were used
to douse the flames. Fire was not the
only threat. Some Victorian Loughburians
do not appear to have been particularly
well behaved. Vandalism to the trees in
Burton Walks became such a problem
that, at the governors’ request, a police
officer patrolled the area on Sundays and
a reward was offered for information as to
the miscreants.
Loughborough Grammar School has
gone from strength to strength. It has
grown in size as well as in reputation.
Collectively, there is now a ‘family’ of
schools - the Grammar School itself, the
High School and Fairfield, and
the pupils of Loughborough
Endowed Schools, as they are
known, remain a familiar sight
in the town. When Colgrove
arrived in 1876, there were just
eight members of the teaching
staff. Today they number in the
dozens. The social links between
the school and the town are also
strong, with open-air concerts
and firework displays amongst
popular shared attractions.
Loughborough students
are probably no more given
to bad language than those of
other universities. They are
nonetheless frequently known
to refer to ‘the Bastard’. This is
not a description of a particularly difficult
assignment but of a very distinctive part
of the campus. The Ashby Road entrance
to the university lies through a wide stone
archway with gates bearing the institution’s
coat-of-arms. These are the Bastard Gates,
named after the man who donated the
money for their erection, William Bastard.
He was chair of the college governors and a
man whose courage is confirmed by the fact
he never changed his name. Step through
these gates and you enter a scene with an
almost theatrical sense of what a university
is believed to look like. Nearby, physically
proclaiming Loughborough’s credentials in
engineering innovation and technological
advance, stands one of James Watt’s steam-
driven beam engines.
An extract from from"Loughborough - A History & Celebration".
Barclays Bank’s Dutch gable in Market Place gave way to concrete. Woolworths moved across the Market to
occupy larger premises and in so doing swept away the 19th-century frontage of Keightleys which, amongst
many other things, sold agricultural equipment.
An extract from from"Loughborough - A History & Celebration".
The name of Thomas Burton will forever
be strongly linked to the story of the grammar
school but his claim to that association
is rather tenuous. In fact, the rise of the
grammar school and the end of Garendon
Abbey came about at approximately the same
time. When Henry VIII closed down the
monasteries, he usually confiscated the land
and money that they held. Wealthy men
like Burton set aside money in their wills
for priests to pray for the salvation of their
souls. Burton’s bequest escaped the king’s
confiscation thanks to three local men. One
of them was Burton’s own relative, Ralph
Lemyngton. They diverted the money so that
it was used for educational purposes. The
school continues to acknowledge its gratitude
to Lemyngton by using his coat-of-arms as
its distinctive red and white badge. It was
only several hundred years later, when a new
stone was carved for Thomas Burton’s grave
that he was mentioned as the benefactor and
founder of the grammar school. The original
inscription for the tombstone is unknown.
(By kind permission of Loughborough Grammar School Archives)
School uniform had not been introduced when this photograph was taken and the variety of pupils’ dress ranges
from straw boaters to tweed suits.
An extract from from"Loughborough - A History & Celebration".
Clemersons, the town’s one and only department store, had started in the mid 19th century as an ironmongers.
It grew both in physical size - occupying a rabbit warren of connected shops on the corner of Cattle Market and
Market Street - and in its range of goods. Furniture sales (as well as storage and removals), glass, carpets, china
and toys were all part of Clemersons’ stock-in-trade.
An extract from from"Loughborough - A History & Celebration".





